Afghan Schools on Verge of Collapse

By Thalif Deen, IPS, 29 December 1998

UNITED NATIONS, Dec 29 (IPS) - Afghanistan's educational system,
battered by nearly 20 years of warfare, is on the verge of collapse,
the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) said Tuesday.

Worse still, said UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy, there is no
indication there can be any improvement.

Under the present rigidly Islamic Taliban regime, Afghanistan has
virtually barred girls from schools and female teachers from
working. The fact remains that the large majority of Afghan
children, especially girls, are deprived of educational
opportunities, Bellamy said.

This is all the more tragic, considering the high demand for
education among Afghans. In Pakistan and Iran, Afghan refugees eagerly
seek educational opportunities for their children.

Net primary school attendance in Afghanistan between 1992 and 1997
comprised 36 percent of the school-going boys but only 11 percent of
girls. The adult literacy rate is 47 percent for men and 15 percent
for women, according to the latest statistics released by UNICEF.

Bellamy argued that, while there always had been a wide gender gap in
education in Afghanistan, this had been exacerbated and
institutionalised as a result of edicts issued by Taliban authorities
banning girls from attending formal schools and female teachers from
working.

The edicts contravened the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child
(CRC) and the Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women (CEDAW), Bellamy said. Afghanistan ratified the CRC in
1994 and signed CEDAW in 1984.

Last year UNICEF stopped providing educational materials and teacher
training to formal schools operated by the Department of
Education. But it continued to work with education authorities in few
of the areas in Afghanistan which remain outside Taliban rule.

Besides seeking a resolution to the political problem, the United
Nations has kept up a dialogue with the Taliban authorities on the
issue of gender equity in education. As a result, the world body
signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Taliban in May this
year. The memorandum, among other points, declared that men and
women shall have the right to education.

These words, however, have yet to be put into practice, Bellamy
said. There is simply no way that Afghanistan can meet the multiple
challenges of the 21st century unless it begins to uphold the right of
all its citizens to basic education.

Af a visit to the politically-troubled South Asian country last April,
Bellamy said that during official talks in Kabul she had insisted that
the Taliban lifted all restrictions on the movement of women working
in Afghanistan.

Mullah Mohammed Rabbani, chairman of the Taliban Supreme Shura, asked
Bellamy for understanding of their customs, and at the same time,
stressed that Western ideas could not be imposed upon them.

I told them I was representing the United Nations, and we were not
advocating a Western model, or any particular model they should
adopt, Bellamy said. The U.N. message is not a Western
message.

The UNICEF head told Taliban authorities that she knew of no country,
including other Islamic nations, where girls officially were denied
access to education.

Bellamy said that while UNICEF and other agencies - including the Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the World Food Programme (WFP) and
the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) - continued providing
humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan, UNICEF had suspended its
education assistance programme.

It would be re-started should there be any move on the part of the
Taliban authorities to include the participation of girls in formal
schools, she added. Currently, UNICEF has a 12 million dollar
programme in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan appeared also to have reached the political point of no
return. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said recently that it had become
increasingly difficult to justify the continuation of U.N. peace
efforts and the attendant costs in the absence of any positive
signs of a peaceful solution to the conflict in Afghanistan.

Annan labelled the Afghan conflict a seemingly endless tragedy of
epic proportions, and he painted a grim picture of the ongoing
large-scale fighting in the hapless country.

The Afghan civil war is between the Taliban and the five-party
Northern Alliance, formally known as the Islamic and National Front
for the Salvation of Afghanistan.

In a report to the Security Council, Annan said that a peaceful
settlement in Afghanistan remains elusive notwithstanding the
untiring efforts of the United Nations to broker peace among
the country's warring factions.

The people's yearning for peace in Afghanistan is being
systematically and continually betrayed by leaders and warlords driven
by selfish ambitions and thirst for power, he said in one of the
most pessimisstic reports on the situation in Afghanistan.

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